How Po Makes Hand Drums, Portia Chapman, Uncategorized

How to Choose the Best Hardwoods for Making Drum Frames by Kingston Artist Portia Po Chapman

Po: “Selecting Hardwood is a Hard Task”

Hi, I am Portia “Po” Chapman from Kingston Ontario. I am an artist who hand makes unique frame drums. On this post, I will show you how to pick the best hardwood pieces for single-ply, steam bent drum frames. You’d think that it is easy, but it is not. Follow these steps and you will improve your chances of success.

Po Returning from Lumber Supplier

What Types of Wood are Best for Bending Drum Frames

My top 3 woods to use are: red oak, maple, cherry. I have not had much luck using white oak or walnut. All the research I have done, says that white ash is the best, but I cannot find a white ash supplier and the white ash drum frames that I have purchased from other suppliers have been economy grade. So for this article, I will address my preferred 3 woods mentioned above.

Po Sanding End Wedge of Red Oak Board
Before Steaming and Bending.
Notice the Long Grain Without Knots.

How to Choose Wood for Drum Frames

When selecting the lumber at the yard, be sure to choose wood without knots, splits, or swirling/wandering grains. All three of these characteristics will result in drum frames that crack and break while bending them into a drum shape. You want to pick long straight grains that do not drift off to the edges of the board. It will take you some time to find the ideal ones. Note: you pay the same price if they are in the same pile, so take your time to choose the most suitable ones.

What Size of Lumber to Buy for Drum Frames

The next thing with which to concern yourself is the board length and width. Most frame drums / hand drums range from 12″-16″ in diameter. To create drums frames of these diameters, you will require boards between 4′-6′ long. If you can afford it, however, purchase boards 7′-8′ long to assure that you can make drum frames after potential splitting during the bending process.

Notice How the White Oak has Snapped. In this Photo, Po’s Assistant is Compressing the Drum Frame to be Marked for Cutting. Be Sure to Have Enough Wood to Accommodate for Splits and Breaks During the Milling, Steaming and Bending Phases of
Frame Drum Making.

Recap – How to Choose Wood for Steam Bending Drum Frames

I choose Red Oak, Maple, or Cherry woods that have long straight grains and have no knots. My preferred stock is 1″ thick, 7′ long and 4″-6″ wide. In Kingston, these boards will run between $50 and $100 each. In short, making steam-bent hardwood drum frames is not a cheap art in which to dabble. At my private art studio in Kingston, I make rawhide drums from 8″-23″ in diameter and range in price from $200-$2000.


Art News, Portia Chapman, Portia's Adventures, Uncategorized

Portia Po Chapman – Mural Installation Artist – Kingston, Ontario – 2024

Day in the Life of Portia Po Chapman by the Toronto Guardian, November 13, 2024 was Published in Response to Kingston’s Portia “Po” Chapman Mural Competition Win for Strong Enterprises in Belleville.

The Toronto Guardian headline states that Po is a Toronto artist. Although she is a Muralist trying to break into the GTA art market, Po is based in Kingston, Ontario. Other than that edit, the following “Day in the Life” article was an accurate telling of Po’s story in 2024.

Article link

I want to thank Emilea Semancik for doing a smashing job on this article.

As an emerging contemporary artist in Ontario, Canada, it has been an exciting month, November 2024 and we are only 13 days in. I received two public features and one day-in-the-life article. I presented my drums and educated the public about drumming and the beauty of the drum making process. Plus my “Sharing Wisdom: Tending to Nature’s Little Ones,” drum was featured in the entrance of the Kingston City Hall gallery in the inaugural show: Kingston Artists’ Showcase. Many more exciting things too. You’ll just have to wait to find out.

Links to all 3 articles are on my ABOUT page. Here is the link.

How Po Makes Hand Drums, Portia Chapman, Uncategorized

Photos of Portia Po Chapman Making Hand Drums During 2021-2023

Photos of Portia Po Chapman Making Hand Drums During 2021-2023

In the winter of 2024, Po began making hand-bent oak drum frames and in the summer she began making maple drum frames as well. All three, current (July 2024) drum frames available for hand drums have their own character, tone and resonance. Rawhide options include: 3 types of Deer, Moose, Elk, and Bison from across Canada.

Po unveiled some new drums at the 2024
Gather in the County: Modern Textile Market
in Picton ON on June 15, 2024

Po is currently producing a few how-to make hand drum videos using her special techniques. In the mean time, Po has created 3 blog posts that list the steps of making the drum frames, stretching the raw hide, and painting the faces of the drums. Drums made by Po are considered “PREMIUM.”

The hand drums in the 2023 collection were meticulously handmade by Po using the following method:

The end result is both a beautiful piece of art that you can display and one that you can use. Some skins are more suitable for drumming and others more suitable for display. This depends on a variety of factors. Po recommends choosing the one you love. If you need further assistance choosing your drum, someone will be happy to assist you.

All drum sales are final and without exchange or refund.

Po presented an Artist Talk about this Collection and Greeted Guests Gallery
on October 26, 2023 at 6:30pm-7:30pm

One Guest Commented: “It was a great pleasure to listen to Portia “Po” Chapman (@loveartbypo) talk about her art currently on display at Parrott Gallery. Po’s inspiration comes from her close relationship with nature and her beautiful family!”

Another Guest Commented: “It was such a wonderfully positive talk about a positive art collection. Very informative and truly enjoyable.”

How Po Makes Hand Drums, Portia Chapman, Uncategorized

How to Make a Painted Drum: Kingston Artist Portia Po Chapman’s Method of Painting a Drum Face

How to Make a Painted Drum: Kingston Artist Portia Po Chapman’s Method of Painting a Drum Face
Portia Po Chapman Painting the Face of 14″ Elk Rawhide Drum: “Knowledge.”

Link to Phase 1: How Po Makes a Drum Frame
Link to Phase 2: How Po Works with Rawhide – Stretching and Stringing
Link to Painted Drum Page

Phase 3: How Po Paints the Face the Drums She Makes

Painting the face of a rawhide drum sounds much simpler than it is. The artist must keep in mind the nature of rawhide. Rawhide stretches and shrinks depending on humidity and temperature. Rawhide vibrates and flexes when it is drummed. Rawhide, is not smooth and sometimes has scars, hair, and wrinkles too. Most of all, each rawhide drum has its own sweet spots – where the drum sounds its best when drummed. Some drums even have multiple sweet spots and a couple locations whereby it makes a quiet sound when drummed. Therefore the paint needs to be thin, flat, translucent, and able to stretch. Po’s drums have addressed all of these issues in order to assure/improve longevity while enabling the drum to be drummed in both interior and exterior environments. When meeting the public at drum shows and art shows, Po is frequently told stories of paint cracking on drums made by other drum makers. Rest assured that Po drums every drum before selling them. Po also encourages clients to drum the drums before purchase as well. As far as the paint longevity – so far so good. Although many of the drums Po makes are sold to clients seeking works of art, Po still seeks to make beautiful drums that can be drummed. In short, whether you want to hang the drum on the wall or take the drum to a drum circle, the same amount of love and time is spent creating your masterpiece – and in so doing, every drum made by Po can be drummed. Po views drum making like this: “Why make a drum if you cannot drum it?!”

Po’s Phase 3 Drum Face Painting is as follows:

  • The image creation stage can happen overnight or as much as 3 months, it depends on the drum.
  • Usually Po will see an image in her mind while drumming the drum, but sometimes images visit her in her dreams.
  • Again, as strange as it sounds, Po says: “I just wait until I see what the drum wants me to see – and each rawhide is different.”
  • It is something like suddenly knowing what one will knit with the fleece that one has cleaned, carded, spun and dyed – each time is different – and so too is the sheep/goat that offered it in the first place.
  • Nature has a way of reaching through the noise and smiling upon us.
  • The image is sketched with a marker and then refined using a light table.
  • The flow of the lines begin to take over and the image you see appears.
  • The image is digitally cleaned up and a template is cut using a Cricut.
  • Upon the dry face of the rawhide drum, the template is traced using a 4H graphite pencil.
  • It is worthy to note that rawhide is a textile that varies widely in flexibility, texture, scarring marks and amount of hairs still present. This means that each drum is painted using a slightly different method.
  • Using a very special, flexible acrylic paint the images are lined (free hand brush painted) with “black” (if at all). The “black” is usually a deep, earthy purple.
  • Po thinly paints the images using #1 to #3 professional grade round acrylic or equivalent watercolour brushes. The images are not stensilled, stamped, or air brushed. The images are not stickers, which some people think because the painted images can appear to float due to the depth of the rawhide’s transparency.
  • Using Po’s innovative colour-blocking style, Po pulls apart the shades and hues. The result is an unblended image that invites the mind to seam together the colours in its own way. The images shift in different lighting conditions and when drummed, the image appears to leap off the face of the drum.
  • The image is briefly held up to an intense studio light, enabling Po to see where a second or third coat of paint is preferred.
  • Once dry, the painted face is lightly sprayed with a mist of archival UV resistant varnish.

I exhibit and sell the drums I make. Please contact me to purchase a completed drum of to discuss a custom hand drum made just for you. I am happy to paint you a drum with the image you choose or one that I create just for you. Custom images are from $250. Drums, with painted and not-painted faces, range from $200-$2000.

I look forward to fitting you with your drum.

Po Standing with Drum Booth
At the Gather in the County – Modern Textile Market – Picton, ON
June 15, 2024

How Po Makes Hand Drums, Portia Chapman, Uncategorized

How to Stretch and String a Rawhide Hand Drum: Kingston Artist Portia Po Chapman’s Method

How to Stretch and String a Rawhide Hand Drum: Kingston Artist Portia Po Chapman’s Method
Po Stringing Her 24 Inch Elk Rawhide Drum Entitled: “Nature in Me.”

Link to: Phase 1 of Drum Making is Making the Drum Frame
Link to: Phase 3 – Painting the Drum Face
Link to: Painted Drums Page

Phase 2 of Drum Making is Working with Rawhide: Soaking, Stretching, Stringing

In order to make a drum, there are 3 basic stages of working with the rawhide: Soaking, Stretching and Stringing. Although these stages can be rushed, to achieve a premium drum that sings beautifully, it takes a lot of time, care and love. Hence, from receiving the rawhide to completing a playable tuned instrument, it takes about 1 month, sometimes longer. In my studio, I do all of the steps below. Please note that I do employ a shop hand to help detangle sinew when I am stringing large drums, like the one in the above image, because a 24 inch diameter drum requires a 100+ feet long continuous strand of sinew .

Phase 2 of Drum Making: Working with Raw Hide

  • Purchase sustainable rawhide that supports Indigenous communities across Canada.
  • Build relationship with the hide.
  • Humidity condition hide in the hide room.
  • Po waits for the hide to “speak” to her – it may sound strange but the hide will choose to make a drum or a drum will not be made. Working with rawhide requires patience and a lot of love.
  • Once the hide is ready to make a drum and make its voice once-again heard, Po introduces the hide to the frame options – this is a beautifully mystical step in Po’s drum making process whereby a holistic, earthy bond is made between wood, rawhide and drum maker.
  • With the marriage of drum frame and drum skin, Po designs a drum skin template with the number and placement of stringing pleats marked.
  • The rawhide is rough cut to match the shape of the template.
  • The rawhide is cleaned, scrubbed, pealed , rubbed and polished.
  • Sometimes the rawhide requires a sunshine bath or controlled UV bath.
  • Using a galvanized wash tub, Po soaks the rawhide for 24-48 hours in a rain water bath as the rawhide is kept submerged using special quartz and/or citrine rocks that she found while diving in her childhood lake.
  • Once the rawhide has become thick and pliable, it is removed from the water and rubbed with a soft terry towel. It is then cut to the shape of the pre-designed template.
  • String holes are punched (Po’s premium drums have between 16 and 30 pleats).
  • Of synthetic and waxed sinew, Po measures out about 5 feet per pleat – yes 80+ feet.
  • The frame is laid onto the underside of the rawhide and Po begins the lacing process.
  • As you can see in the above photo, generally, Po strings the drums by putting the string through two holes (to make pleat) on one side of the drum and then does the same on the exact opposite side of the drum. Po uses more decorative / ornate stringing patterns when stringing Po’s non-circular hand-bent drums.
  • Using a darning needle to string a drum, it takes Po between 2 hours and 8 hours of hand stitching, winding and wrapping the sinew as she pulls the rawhide into place. It can be tricky, when stringing large drums, because the hide begins to dry and become stiff within 30 minutes of being removed from the water. Aligning the timing of stitching and drying is possibly the most difficult thing for a drum maker must grow accustomed.
  • At this step, Po has found that the hide wins the tugging process. No matter how even the rawhide edge is originally made by Po, the rawhide will pull it to where it wants – resulting in a less uniform rawhide edge around the frame. Synthetic skin head drums do not present this challenge.
  • It is also worth noting that each animal and species’ rawhide pulls differently – and the spinal ridge pulls differently from the belly region. This takes a long time to get used to. In the case of working with rawhide as a textile, Po has had to relax and work with the rawhide, rather than demanding that it behave as she may want it to.
  • The drum is placed on the drum drying racks and is dried in a 50% humidity controlled space.
  • Once the drum is dry, it is taken out into the sunlight and drummed.
  • Po sings, chants and drums the new drum as they both rejoice. It is a seemingly miraculous happening.
  • Sometimes the general pitch of the drum is determined by drumming it beside a well tuned 1950’s Heinzman piano.
  • You cannot get use to the moment when the rawhide seems to come back to life and express its own voice and connection with the drummer.
  • The drum’s pulse throbs upon the breeze.
  • The ethers rejoice and the heart smiles with an air of wellness.
  • The central sinew knot at the back of the drum is then waxed. To try the drums, Po has people use nitrile gloves. When the drum is paid for and drummer is ready, the drummer’s glove is removed. At that time, the drummer & drum imprint. Their bond is marked by the drummer’s hand print pressed into the beeswax.
  • The drum is then cared for and sung with in the humidity controlled studio until it is to have a painted face (if it is ever painted – some drums refuse to be painted while other drums seek to be painted).
  • Another phenomenon then occurs – the drum picks the drummer at exactly the same time as when the drummer picks the drum. The moment of bonding is nothing short of magical.
  • Premium drums made by Po are very, very special – and premium special drums cannot be rushed.

I exhibit and sell the drums I make. Please contact me to purchase a completed drum or to discuss a custom hand drum made just for you. Drums range from $200-$2000.

I look forward to fitting you with your drum,
Po

Po Standing with Drum Booth
At the Gather in the County – Modern Textile Market – Picton, ON
June 15, 2024

How Po Makes Hand Drums, Portia Chapman, Uncategorized

How to Make a Drum Frame: Kingston Artist Portia Po Chapman’s Method

How to Make a Drum Frame: Kingston Artist Portia Po Chapman’s Method

Portia “Po” Chapman Hand Rubbing Paint into Cedar Drum Frame

Link to Phase 2 of Drum Making: Working with the Rawhide
Link to Phase 3 of Drum Making: Painting the Drum Face
Link to Drum Page

Phase 1 of Drum Making is Making / Preparing the Drum Frame

A drum frame takes me about weeks to make from start to finish. In my studio, I do all of the steps below. Please note that, I do employ a shop hand to help clamp and bend the steamed wood – this requires 2 sets of hands.

  • Purchase wood
  • Cut wood to desired thickness
  • Plane the wood smooth
  • Sand ends into wedges
  • Soak wood in the sun for 3 days
  • Steam the wood in the steam box
  • Rough bend the wood under boots
  • Shape flexible wood
  • Glue and clamp wood
  • Let wet wood dry 3 days
  • For coiled wood frames, the wood is planed very thinly and before gluing the coil is created by clamping and re-bending more tightly 3 times over a week’s time.
  • For both the hand bent in-studio frames and rough pre-coiled frames, the following steps are the same
  • Sand the frame to desired shape, thickness and smoothness
  • Paint, rub, dye or stain frame
  • Polish and finely sand frame
  • Varnish

I exhibit and sell the drums I make. Please contact me to purchase a completed drum of to discuss a custom hand drum made just for you. Drums range from $200-$2000.

Po Standing with Drum Booth
At the Gather in the County – Modern Textile Market – Picton, ON
June 15, 2024

Back to Painted Drums Page

Contact: portia@loveartbypo.ca

Art News, Portia Chapman, Uncategorized

Truth Image Goes Viral: Kingston Artist Portia Po Chapman’s Indigenous Illustration for Queen’s University

Truth Image Goes Viral:
Kingston Artist Portia Po Chapman’s Indigenous Illustration for Queen’s University
Queen's University Truth Image Web Icon by Kingston Artist Portia Po Chapman Featuring an Indigenous Clan Mother Sharing Stories of Truth Around a Sacred Fire.  Around the Circular Outside Edge is a Sweetgrass Braid and Two Bald Eagle Feathers

The “Truth” image went viral during the week leading up to Canada’s first National Day for Truth and Reconciliation, Sept. 2021. Across Canada, the image was featured with an orange background. In this post, Po expands upon the image and how it’s popularity took off during that week, click here. The truth image was one of 10 Indigenous Themed icons that Po was commissioned to illustrate Indigenous “Ways of Knowing” for the Queen’s University Office of Indigenous Initiatives website in 2020.

Since then, the icons from the collection decorate and honour a multitude of Queen’s University documents and events. When Po created the icons, the brief was to create something similar to the University of Saskatchewan images. The brief that she was given went a step further, “but one-of-a-kind.” The commissioning committee wanted Po to create illustrations that distinguished Queen’s University from all other Universities. So, in short, the brief was like having one’s cake and being able to eat it too. To paraphrase the brief, one could say: “illustrate icons like U of S, but make them nothing like U of S.”

When Po offered her idea of creating circular icons, like buttons, that could be easily used across the University platforms, it was a NEW concept. Contemporary graphic circular Indigenous Illustrations were, in general, not being used by other Universities, so there was really no comparison at the time. It can be argued that if one sees circular, graphic icons like the ones the Queen’s University has, it was because Po and the OII created them first.

The icons also featured Po’s circular composition and artistic style that is inspired by wild grapevine silhouettes cast by the bright noonday sun.

It was quite the day, September 30, 2021, for Po who was inundated with a multitude of requests to use the “Truth” image because the public, somehow, began to view it as the new Orange Shirt Day for the “Every Child Matters” campaign. With each call, Po referred the people to the Queen’s OII because they commissioned the image.

Now that 3 National Days for Truth and Reconciliation have passed (Queen’s Gazette ), it seems that the public have adopted the image as another representation of Truth and Reconciliation during Orange Shirt Day. Here are some links to examples of where the image has been shared and/or published:
Women’s Shelter
Girl Guides of Canada
York School Board
Pickering College
Municipality of Dundurn
Newmarket Mayor’s Office
Fringe Toronto
Queens Arc
Queens Law

Po’s contemporary art style and circular imagery has been growing more popular since Queen’s University published the images on the OII website. This past September 2023 the Broadview Press Indigenous Philosophies of Turtle Island Anthology: Ways of Being in the World featured her artwork. The editor from Oklahoma , Andrea Sullivan-Clarke and University of Windsor professor contacted Po because of the Queen’s Page. Also a Salish construction and land development company (the branding has not yet been made public, so the images have net yet been publicly released for public viewing) commissioned Po to do their new logo and branding imagery based upon the “Elder in Residence” image from the Queen’s Faculty of Education Indigenous Initiatives.

Portia Chapman, Portia's Adventures, Uncategorized

Visual Artist Portia Po Chapman Artworks and Biography: Additional Information

Visual Artist Portia Po Chapman Artworks and Biography: Additional Information
Kingston Artist Portia “Po” Chapman performing precision touch-ups on the installed "Exploring the Senses" mural at Base31 Sensory Garden, using a small round artist brush to ensure a perfect execution of the storytelling art.
Artist Portia “Po” Chapman finalizing the installation of the “Exploring the Senses” 5′-6″ circular mural.

This page from 2023 has been since updated to this page. Thank you for your patience.

Art Print, Artist Portia Po Chapman Mural, Artist Portia Po Chapman My Creation, Portia Chapman, Portia's Adventures, Uncategorized

A Process of Art Planning Creation by Portia Po Chapman Kingston Artist

A Process of Art Planning Creation by Portia Po Chapman Kingston Artist

We all have our own method and strategy to create our art pieces. For me, I start with 2 things:
1/ An idea notebook that I enter flashes of visions, ideas, concepts, and sketches of possible cool things to do in the future. I also include inspiration quotes and sometimes reflections about my experiences. I keep sheets of paper on my bedside table to record dreams too. When one idea doesn’t float at one point, it may in the future.
The following image was eventually painted in 2022 as a mural for Queen’s University’s Kingston Hall Reflection Room but I first created it in 2018 for my 3rd year BFAH class and it was rejected by the professor because the prof said that, “It looks like something you’d paint in your garage.” The thing is, it was the beginnings of my current art style and landed me several commissions when I finally finished it outside the course.
“My Creation” mural took 4 years before it was commissioned and mounted. It began with a simple sketch and grew for years. The mural was created because the ASUS executive adored the original digital image and had been awaiting the chance to have it painted. This is often how commissions work. The organic growth and development of art concepts can take many turns until it reaches its destination. I still find the journey amazing.

“My Creation” Mural in Kingston
2022

“My Creation” Mural Complete in My Studio
2022

“My Creation” Mural Size Planning
(we chose square)
2021

“My Creation” Published as Cover Image
(the cover is more intense the photo is faded)
2019

“My Creation” Digital Journal Cover Proposal
2018

“My Creation” Began as a Sketch and Then I Painted
a Trial Image Which was Rejected by My Prof
2018

2/ The second thing I do for art creation is take photos or have photos of me in the environment. I like to catch a moment – the nuances of life that happen in a moment in time. The following digital image is a current idea that I am working on as I consider the painting medium and final expression. The piece is entitled, “My Drum and Me.”

“My Drum and Me” Digital Draft for Painting Planning
2023

“My Drum and Me” Stone Lithograph Art Print
2018

“My Drum and Me” Hand Drawing Lithographic Stone
2018

“My Drum and Me” Original Photo
A Family Member Took this Photo When I Was Drumming Outside
2017

Again as one can see, a beautiful moment in time captured by a photo and/or inspiration notes and drawings can lead to some really beautiful art pieces in the future. If anything, their journey materializes as life takes its own twists and turns. An art concept never gets old, it simply waits for its time to shine, but as it waits, the inspiration weaves itself through one’s career and the creation of other pieces. Art is not created in a vacuum – it lives and breathes through us as artists and art enthusiasts. Art is alive, even as it awaits its birth.

Never Ever Toss an Idea or Beautiful Life Moment

Portia Chapman, Portia's Adventures, Uncategorized

Kingston Artist, Portia “Po” Chapman Completes Over 45 Art Pieces in 18 Months

Kingston Artist, Portia “Po” Chapman Completes Over 45 Art Pieces in 18 Months
Kingston Freelance Commission Artist Portia Po Chapman Posing with Stone Lithograph Donation to the South Shore Joint Initiative in Prince Edward County

It is difficult to believe, but it is true. I had lost track. How funny is that!? As they say: “It never feels like work when you love what you do.” I guess, when not sleeping, I am creating. With that said, I often wake up suddenly with an art project idea and quickly sketch it down on a pad of paper that I keep on my bedside table. So, maybe I am working, even in my dreams.

Also, since my 25th birthday in April 2022, I have had a lot of life altering things happen. My family and I moved our home from Belleville to Kingston, and I received a couple new teaching positions. As both a treat and necessity, I even bought my first vehicle. Although the move had its challenging moments, it provided me with space for a small gallery, a bright meeting space and mural painting room, plus a rough space for wood working and drum building. I like to make most of my own hardwood stretchers and like to stretch my own canvas. This winter, I will be able to use a wood steamer that I built in the summer. I can’t wait to bend my drum frames and circular painting stretchers. As you can imagine, life as an artist is never boring.

As an emerging artist it is really exciting as my art is growing in popularity. While preparing competition documents for a current mural commission, I put together a snapshot of my most recent art and art-related projects. As strange as it may sound, I surprised myself. I knew that I had been busy, but when I compiled it in a list, I was like: “Wow, I guess I have done a lot.” The following is the rough list that I compiled. You can read more about these projects in my CV.

 29 Freelance Commissioned Pieces:

– 7 digital web icons – Queen’s University
– 1 painted drum – Queen’s
– 2 painted drums – Private Commission
– 2 exterior murals – Base31
– 1 interior mural – Base31
– 5 Sensory Garden signs – Base31
– 2 digital border templates – Base31
– 1 interior mural – Queen’s
– 1 book cover digital to print image – Broadview Press
– 5 title page digital to print images – Broadview Press
– 1 logo digital to web and print – Kingston School of Art
– 1 logo digital to web and print – WEYTK Communities Inc. (B.C.)

3 Philanthropic Art Donations:

– 1 painting – QAC/Parrott Art Gallery
– 1 art print stone lithograph – PEC South Shore Joint Initiative (created 2018)
– 1 painting – PEC SSJI

3 Gallery Showings:

– “Must We Wear Heals” sculpture / cast (created 2017) – Parrott Art Gallery
– “Emergence: Future Unknown” painting – QAC / Parrott Art Gallery
– “Drumming Sounds of Colour” 15 piece solo painted drum exhibit – Parrott Art Gallery

Additional Fall 2023 Art and Art-Related Projects:

– 5 Sensory Garden signs – Base31
– 3 large painted drums – WEYTK
– Mural reveal presentation – Base31
– Drum exhibit art talk – Parrott Art Gallery
– Concurrent Education seminar leader – Queen’s
– Artist in Community presentation and workshop leader – Queen’s
– Nursing medical textbook cover
– Drum creation for spring show & sale
– Ongoing paintings

Art Teaching:

– Elementary online Itinerant Art Teacher – ALCDSB
– Grades 9 & 10 Visual Art PECI
– Grades 9 – 12 Visual Art – Regi & HC, ALCDSB
– 5 monthly Creation Stations – Agnes Etherington Art Centre
– 1 March Break Art & Sports Camp – Agnes
– 1 Summer Art & Sports Camp – Agnes
– 1 digital online video children’s story book – Youtube

Additional Art Training:

– Teaching Gr 12 Media Art – University of Windsor
– Teaching International Baccalaureate Visual Art – University of Windsor

Features:

– Kingston in Focus
– QAC Umbrella (this winter 2024)
– QAC Member Spotlight
– County Arts Member Spotlight

Volunteer:

Tett Centre for Creativity and Learning, Kingston – Training November 2023